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Among people diagnosed with HIV/AIDS, the widespread use of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) has greatly improved survival rates and changed the leading causes of death, from AIDS-related diseases to cardiovascular disease and lung cancer. Rates of tobacco use among individuals with HIV/AIDS are very high and varenicline may be particularly efficacious for treating nicotine dependence among individuals with HIV/AIDS. Through this trial, 310 smokers with HIV/AIDS will be randomized to varenicline plus 9 weeks of smoking cessation counseling or placebo plus 9 weeks of smoking cessation counseling. The investigators hypothesize that 1) varenicline and counseling will significantly increase end-of-treatment (week 12) and 24-week biochemically-confirmed abstinence, versus placebo and counseling; 2) quality of life will be rated higher in the varenicline and counseling group versus the placebo and counseling group, and there will be no significant differences between treatment arms in terms of the frequency of severe varenicline-related side effects; and 3) improved affect and reduced cognitive impairment will mediate the effect of varenicline therapy on quit rates.

The HIV/AIDS-Targeted Quality of Life scale measures overall functioning, which will be the primary measure of QOL for this study, but several subscales of QOL are also included such as life satisfaction, health worries, HIV mastery, financial worries, and disclosure worries. In addition, the investigators will compare treatment arms in terms of the frequency of severe side effects (individual and total).

Prolonged Abstinence [ Time Frame: Weeks 12 & 24 ]

Relapse is 7 consecutive days of self-reported smoking, after a 2-week grace period.

Continuous Abstinence [ Time Frame: Weeks 12 & 24 ]

No smoking between the quit day and the follow-up; no smoking during weeks 9-12 as measured in previous varenicline trials with the general population of smokers.

Among people diagnosed with HIV/AIDS, the widespread use of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) has greatly improved survival rates and changed the leading causes of death, from AIDS-related diseases (e.g., non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, Kaposi sarcoma), to cardiovascular disease and lung cancer. As such, addressing modifiable risk factors for disease mortality among those with HIV/AIDS, including tobacco use, has become a critical priority. To date, only three smoking cessation clinical trials have been conducted with those with HIV/AIDS none of which investigated the efficacy of FDA-approved medications for nicotine dependence. Varenicline is an α4β2 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor partial agonist with greater efficacy for treating nicotine dependence than bupropion or nicotine patch. Varenicline may be particularly efficacious for treating nicotine dependence among individuals with HIV/AIDS given that depression symptoms and cognitive impairment are common in this population, increase during smoking abstinence and predict smoking relapse, and are significantly reduced by varenicline. Therefore, the investigators will conduct a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of varenicline with smokers with HIV/AIDS. Specifically, 310 smokers with HIV/AIDS will be randomized to varenicline plus 9 weeks of smoking cessation counseling or placebo plus 9 weeks of smoking cessation counseling. The primary outcome variable for this study will be 7-day biochemically confirmed tobacco abstinence at weeks 12 and 24. Secondary outcomes include: prolonged abstinence to week 12, 18, and 24 (relapse defined as 7 consecutive days of self-reported smoking, after a 2-week grace period), continuous abstinence at weeks 12 and 24 (e.g., no smoking between quit day and follow-up), time to 7-day relapse (no grace period), and lapse and recovery events. The trial results may support the use of varenicline for the treatment of nicotine dependence among those with HIV/AIDS, thereby reducing tobacco-related morbidity and mortality in this population.

Eligibility

Information from the National Library of Medicine

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Ages Eligible for Study:

18 Years and older (Adult, Senior)

Sexes Eligible for Study:

All

Accepts Healthy Volunteers:

No

Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

18 years of age or older who self-report smoking at least 5 cigarettes (menthol and non-menthol) per day, on average.

Able to use varenicline safely, based on a medical evaluation including medical history and physical examination, and psychiatric evaluation.

Residing in the geographic area for at least 7 months.

Women of childbearing potential (based on medical history and physical exam) must consent to use a medically accepted method of birth control (e.g., condoms and spermicide, oral contraceptive, Depo-Provera injection, contraceptive patch, tubal ligation) or abstain from sexual intercourse during the time they are taking study medication and for at least one month after the medication period ends.

If current or past diagnosis of bipolar disorder (I, II, or NOS), eligible if:

Current use or plans to use nicotine substitutes (gum, patch, lozenge, e-cigarette) or smoking cessation treatments in the next 7 months.

Note: Once participants are found eligible for the study, they are told they should refrain from using any nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) for the duration of the study. If a subject reports an isolated (non-daily) instance of NRT use during the study, they may be permitted to continue.

Alcohol/Drug Exclusion Criteria

Current untreated and unstable diagnosis of substance abuse or dependence (eligible if past use and if receiving treatment and stable for >30 days).

a. Note: Once participants are found eligible for the study, they are instructed to only use the smoking cessation medication provided to them by the study staff. If a subject reports an isolated (non-daily) instance of using a non-study smoking cessation medication, the study physician and PI will evaluate the situation and determine if it is safe for the subject to continue participation.

Anti-psychotic medications.

Medical Exclusion Criteria

Women who are pregnant, planning a pregnancy within the next 7 months, or lactating.

Current diagnosis of unstable and untreated major depression, as determined by self-report & MINI (eligible if stable for >30 days).

Current or past diagnosis of psychotic disorder, as determined by self-report or MINI.

a. Note: If a participant presents with blood pressure greater than 160/100 at sessions occurring on Week 0 (Pre-Quit) or at any other point during the treatment period, they will not be provided with/able to continue on medication unless the study physician grants approval.